BlackShanglan
Silver-Tongued Papist
- Joined
- Jul 7, 2004
- Posts
- 16,888
Please feel free to ignore this. I'm about to express an unpopular opinion and resurrect a thread involving Amicus at the same time, so I know that I won't be getting any gold stars for public service for this one.
That said, this has been bothering me for days:
I recognize that my views on this matter are not in the majority here. In fact, I will take a step I don't often take and identify my views: unless it is absolutely required to save the mother's life, I do not believe abortion to be morally right. Feel free to stop reading if, as many will, you feel that you can't accept this opinion and that reading further will only annoy you. However, I feel strongly compelled to answer Box's comparison.
There are key differences between the examples you list and a fertilized ovum. The most significant is that it's not the same person as the mother. One's hair, one's blood, one's mucus and fingernails and sloughed skin cells are all part of the same person. They have the same DNA and are part of the same organism.
A fertilized ovum (or embryo, or fetus, or baby) is not the same person. It has its own DNA and is not genetically anyone but itself. While it develops within a woman's body, it is not its mother; it is itself, distinct from her on the most basic genetic level. The nature of gestation requires it to be nourished and protected by the mother until it reaches an appropriate age and level of growth, but it is not the same person.
This is supported as well by the question of potential. My hair, skin, mucus, and blood will not eventually develop the ability to support themselves in an external environment. They do not inherently have the ability to become complete human beings, and barring quite extreme levels of technological intervention in the form of cloning, they never will. A fertilized ovum, on the other hand, is genetically a seperate human being and all of its functions in growth and development are geared toward the eventual physical seperation that this implies. It would be impossible to force it to remain part of its mother, and of course its very nature as a seperate human being is what leads to a desire to abort it. If it wasn't going at some point to come out and live its own life, it would not be nearly the problem it is.
Finally, removal of a fertilized ovum from the body does something quite different from removing blood, hair, mucus, or even limbs. It permanently destroys a genetically distinct entity. When my hair or blood or skin cells die, the genetic entity - the person - who made them continues to live. There is no death of the individual as a whole; the organism continues to exist as the same organism it was before these losses. When a fertilized egg (or embryo, or fetus, or baby) is remove from the womb and destroyed, a genetically distinct individual is permanently destroyed.
Didn't think I was likely to convince anyone. Just felt the need to offer the opposing view.
Shanglan
That said, this has been bothering me for days:
Boxlicker said:I can see right now that we are never going to agree on this one. I consider these fertilized ova to be not human beings. I also consider the placental blood that has soaked into a Kotex not to be live human tissue although it was live at one time. I do not consider my fingernail clippings to be live human tissue, nor the whiskers that I shave off my face, nor the snot that I sneeze out of my nose. These are all human tissue and all were once alive, but no longer are.
I recognize that my views on this matter are not in the majority here. In fact, I will take a step I don't often take and identify my views: unless it is absolutely required to save the mother's life, I do not believe abortion to be morally right. Feel free to stop reading if, as many will, you feel that you can't accept this opinion and that reading further will only annoy you. However, I feel strongly compelled to answer Box's comparison.
There are key differences between the examples you list and a fertilized ovum. The most significant is that it's not the same person as the mother. One's hair, one's blood, one's mucus and fingernails and sloughed skin cells are all part of the same person. They have the same DNA and are part of the same organism.
A fertilized ovum (or embryo, or fetus, or baby) is not the same person. It has its own DNA and is not genetically anyone but itself. While it develops within a woman's body, it is not its mother; it is itself, distinct from her on the most basic genetic level. The nature of gestation requires it to be nourished and protected by the mother until it reaches an appropriate age and level of growth, but it is not the same person.
This is supported as well by the question of potential. My hair, skin, mucus, and blood will not eventually develop the ability to support themselves in an external environment. They do not inherently have the ability to become complete human beings, and barring quite extreme levels of technological intervention in the form of cloning, they never will. A fertilized ovum, on the other hand, is genetically a seperate human being and all of its functions in growth and development are geared toward the eventual physical seperation that this implies. It would be impossible to force it to remain part of its mother, and of course its very nature as a seperate human being is what leads to a desire to abort it. If it wasn't going at some point to come out and live its own life, it would not be nearly the problem it is.
Finally, removal of a fertilized ovum from the body does something quite different from removing blood, hair, mucus, or even limbs. It permanently destroys a genetically distinct entity. When my hair or blood or skin cells die, the genetic entity - the person - who made them continues to live. There is no death of the individual as a whole; the organism continues to exist as the same organism it was before these losses. When a fertilized egg (or embryo, or fetus, or baby) is remove from the womb and destroyed, a genetically distinct individual is permanently destroyed.
Didn't think I was likely to convince anyone. Just felt the need to offer the opposing view.
Shanglan
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